BED 
OF 
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Dwarf or Baby Rambler Roses 
The Baby Ramblers fill a long-felt want for a rose 
suitable for planting along walks, driveways, and 
around beds where a low growing bush is desired for 
planting in beds or single specimen plants. They are 
of a dwarf habit, rarely growing more than twelve 
inches in height. Blooming always. Absolutely hardy. 
LA PQNCEAU—Dark red large clusters. 
JESSIE—The color is clear and brilliant ruby-red; 
foliage dark and glossy. 
ANNY MULLER—Color a shiny and brilliant pink, 
produced in the greatest profusion in large clusters. 
DOUBLE WHITE BABY RAMBLER—Great masses 
of double, pure white flowers, covering the plant 
as with a mantle. 
BABY TAUSENDSCHON—Flowers firm, white, 
delicately flushed pink, changing to deep rosy- 
carmine. 
GEO. ELGER—It produces great quantities of lovely 
little buds of golden-yellow, opening into miniature 
symmetrical Roses. Bush is so loaded with blooms 
they resemble a hugh bouquet. 
MRS. WM. CUTBUSH—Flowers of pale pink, borne 
in huge trusses throughout the entire summer. 
(ORLEANS—Brilliant gerinium red flowers, suffused 
rose, with a rosy-white center. 
EDITH CAVELL—Bright crimson, white eye. 
GRUSS AN AUCHEN—Yellowish rose colored with 
salmon pink and red shadings. Blooms larger than 
the average polyantha. 
ELLEN POULSON—Dark brilliant pink. 
*CLOTILDE SOUPERT—Known the world over as 
one of the very best of all bedding Roses. A strong, 
dwarf grower and a truly wonderful bloomer, pro- 
ducing clusters after clusters of the finest formed 
flowers. Full and double, and deliciously sweet. 
Color effect is beautiful, ivory-white, shading 
toward the center to silvery-rose. 
Price of all Baby Rambler Roses offered on this page, 
except where noted, 20c each for strong pot plants; 3 for 
50c, postpaid; two-year-old plants, 75c each; $7.50 per 
dozen, by express, or 85c each by parcel post prepaid with 
soil on roots. 
BABY 
28 
RAMBLERS 
Miscellaneous Roses 
HARRISON’S YELLOW ROSE—One of the finest 
pure deep yellow hardy Roses ever grown. Three= 
year-old plants only, $1.25 each. 
THE CHEROKEE ROSE—A strong, erect-growing 
sort, with glossy green leaves. The bushes bear 
large pure white Roses in great profusion. Mod- 
erately hardy. Price, first size, 25c each, post- 
paid; two-year-old plants, 85c each; $8.50 doz. 
SOLEIL D’OR—A blending of reddish gold, orange- 
yellow, nasturtium-red and pink. Low-budded, 
field-grown plants, $1.25 each. 
BARONESS ROTHSCHILD—Rose-lovers in all coun- 
tries agree that it is the acme of perfection in flower 
and growth. Flowers bright rosy pink, of immense 
size and globular form. The boldness of the flowers 
with their broad, thick petals, suggests solidity and 
massiveness; they are borne erect on stout, thick 
canes. Perfectly hardy and blooms twice and fre- 
quently three times in a season. Price, two-year= 
old plants, extra heavy, budded, $1.25. 
MME. EDOUARD HERRIOT (Daily Mail)—Buds 
coral-red, shaded with yellow at the base, the open 
flowers of medium size, semi-double, are of superb 
coral-red tinted with yellow and_ rosy-scarlet. 
Three-year-old plants only, $1.25 each, by 
express. 
F. J. GROOTENDORST—This is a new type of 
Rose which might properly be called a Rugosa Baby 
Rambler, it being a cross between Rugosa and the 
crimson Baby Rambler. Imagine a shrub-like Rugosa 
Rose covered with trusses of crimson Baby Rambler 
Roses and you will have a fair conception of this new 
hybrid variety. It is not a Rose that you want to 
plant in with your bed of Hybrid-Tea or Hybrid 
Perpetual Roses, but is valuable to plant as an 
isolated specimen or in a mass in a bed in an exposed 
position or among shrubs in a shrubbery border or 
use it for an everblooming hedge for which purpose 
it is admirably adapted. It is absolutely hardy and 
continues in bloom until late in the fall. Strong 
two-year-old plants, $1.00 each, by express. 
